Government must be serious with its
commitment to the oil palm sector as it holds tremendous potential to
create jobs and reduce poverty, says Harrie Hendrickx, Regional Oil Palm
Programme Manager of Solidaridad, a global investor in sustainable
agricultural supply chains.
Oil palm is the fifth-largest crop in
Ghana in terms of area planted after cocoa, maize, cassava and yam.
Approximately 305,758 hectares of plantation is being cultivated
nationwide, with an additional 20,000 hectares needed to meet local
demand.
Ghana is a net importer of the crop,
with the gap in the order of 50,000 metric tonnes per year -- a figure
estimated to hit over 150,000 metric tonnes by the next 15 years.
“Ghana has a very competitive location
for oil palm development compared to its immediate neighbours and top
global growers,” said
Mr. Hendrickx in an interview with the
B&FT. “There is a great opportunity for making a lot of money
within the sector and involving more people.”
Speaking at a training programme to
educate oil palm farmers on new farming techniques to increase
productivity and profitability,
Mr. Hendrikx shared the concerns of farmers who complained of neglect by government despite the crop’s huge potential.
“In the oil palm sector, farmers
experience very little help from government. There are no extension
officers to provide training to any farmer. Nobody tells us what to
grow, how to farm, how to get higher productivity or learn new farming
and agronomic techniques. We are left alone in the business, unlike
farmers of cash crops such as cocoa and rubber,” said Kwame Adentwi, a
farmer in Abekwasi in the Western Region.
He said the lack of financial support
from government and banks, lack of appropriate pricing for their
commodity, and no input subsidies all combine to deprive them of a
decent livelihood from the crop.
Mr. Hendrikx added that land ownership
is a challenge that must be fixed if farmers are to expand their
production beyond the subsistence level.
Three years ago, government published
an oil palm master-plan that set out a strategy to boost production and
farmers’ competitiveness, but growers say the words have not been
followed by actions.
Ghana’s first international commercial
trade in oil palm took place in 1820. Starting from wild harvesting,
oil palm evolved into an agricultural crop and plantations were
established by 1850.
In the 1880s, the crop accounted for
75 percent of export revenue until it was overtaken by cocoa in 1911.
Global production of oil palm is estimated by the United States
Department of Agriculture at 50.28 million metric tonnes in the
crop-year ending September 2011. Africa’s share dropped from about 27
percent in 1980 to 3 percent in 2011.
Indonesia and Malaysia are the top-two growers, accounting for 85 percent of world production.
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
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